Yoga Instruction online is slowly catching on. It’s a strange concept for some whose sole experience of yoga has been in a group class at the neighbourhood yoga studio, but for those who understand that yoga is much more than just a group of exercises and techniques, the internet has opened up a whole new realm of yoga learning.
But it has also created a lot of potential problems. Anyone with web experience knows that creating a professional looking website or posting well-polished videos is pretty easy stuff, and you don’t need to be proficient in your subject material to do it.
Yoga is no exception, which means separating the yoga experts from the non-experts isn’t easy. In fact, quite often the real yoga authorities have pretty amateurish looking websites, while some marginally educated yoga enthusiast have some pretty cool sites. The bottom line is, don’t be fooled by design.
That doesn’t mean you can’t learn a lot about yoga online. It just means that you have to be smart about it. There’s several things to consider …
The first is not easy to reconcile. It’s that hotly debated topic of what proper yoga instruction is. I’ve gone on at length in many other posts and articles about this, and I won’t tread too far there today.
What makes for good yoga instruction online is the same thing that makes for good yoga instruction in the living, breathing world - having a teacher that is qualified and knows what they are talking about.
… and I’ve got news that might surprise you Just because someone has a certificate for a few hundred hours of “yoga teacher training” and/or is registered by one of the popular modern yoga associations, does not mean they really have a deep knowledge or experience of yoga.
Yes, sadly … that’s true.
Proper knowledge and experience of yoga comes through years of dedicated study and practice under the guidance of someone who has a real mastery of yoga … something that very few of today’s yoga teachers have.
Finding the right yoga teacher does take some work. It might be easier to assess someone face to face that it is in cyberspace. At least, in person, flaws and cracks can’t be easily edited away, and teachers need to be able to demonstrate in real time that they have successfully cultivated the virtues and disciplines of yoga themselves.
But most well established yogis have an online presence now too, and some are starting to provide some great new opportunities to learn yoga online as well. The internet is definitely no longer a place to be ignored by aspiring yogis. My advice, as always, is to do your research before diving in too deep. Remember that all is not necessarily what it seems on the World Wide Web … after all, that’s why they call it “the virtual world.”